Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Saturday that he plans to issue a decree banning Afghan security forces from calling in NATO aircraft to launch strikes in residential areas. ap

KABUL, Afghanistan

The new commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan said Sunday he would comply with an intended order by President Hamid Karzai that prohibits Afghan forces from calling in NATO airstrikes on residential areas.

Gen. Joseph Dunford, on the job here a week, said the international coalition would find “other ways” to support Afghan ground forces, which frequently depend on NATO air power in their operations against Taliban insurgents.

Karzai announced his planned decree Saturday after 10 civilians, including five women and four children, died in a NATO airstrike Tuesday night reportedly called in by Afghan intelligence operatives in a remote village in eastern Konar province. The air attack on two homes also killed three militant commanders, Afghan officials said.

Karzai repeatedly has lashed out at the coalition over civilian casualties. NATO says it does its best to limit them. Dunford said Sunday that international forces have made “extraordinary progress in mitigating the risk to civilians.”

The four-star general, 57, who took command from fellow Marine Gen. John Allen on Feb. 10, appeared easygoing but frank in an informal gathering he convened Sunday to introduce himself to international and local media. As head of the International Security Assistance Force, as the coalition is officially known, he is tasked with concluding Western forces’ combat mission here by the end of 2014.

One of his challenges is dealing with the mercurial and combative Karzai, who some U.S. officials perceive as ungrateful for the massive support his country has received — mainly from the United States — during the 11-year war, in which 2,177 U.S. troops have died.

NATO has trained and equipped about 350,000 members of the Afghan security forces who are set to assume responsibility for the nation’s defense against a resilient and resourceful Taliban insurgency.

In a speech Saturday at a Kabul military academy, Karzai said he intended to issue an order “stating that under no conditions can Afghan forces request foreign airstrikes on Afghan homes or Afghan villages during operations.”

“Our forces ask for air support from foreigners, and children get killed in an airstrike,” the Afghan leader added.

Dunford said he respected Afghan sovereignty and would meet with the country’s army chief and defense minister to “work through the details” of the new airstrike arrangement Karzai wants.

A former Afghan general, Amrullah Aman, reacted with surprise to Karzai’s remarks.

“In a country like Afghanistan, where you don’t have heavy artillery and you don’t have air forces to support soldiers on the ground, how will it be possible to defeat an enemy that knows the area well and can hide anywhere?” Aman said.